A Tale of Two American Literary Icons: Ernest Hemingway & Ezra Pound

     Hemingway wrote about the American poet Ezra Pound,

“His own writing, when he would hit it right, was so perfect, and he was so sincere in his mistakes and so enamored of his errors, and so kind to people that I always thought of him as a sort of saint.”[2]

      This article discusses the friendship that developed between these two American literary icons. It also discusses the dramatic divergence in their lives as a result of their actions during World War II, as well as the mental illnesses they allegedly developed in their later years.  

American Literary Icons: Ezra Pound, left and Ernest Hemingway

Friendship

An unlikely mentor, flashy Ezra!

      Hemingway at first misjudged Ezra Pound when they met in Paris in 1922. Pound’s open-throated shirt, unclipped goatee, and the showy blue-glass buttons on Pound’s jacket convinced Hemingway that Pound was a colossal fake. However, Hemingway soon realized that Pound was a far more generous and complex person than he had originally assumed.[3]

      Both Hemingway and Pound were passionately devoted to their art and admired each other’s work. Hemingway, who at this time of his life was both responsive to constructive criticism and intensely interested in the technique of poetry and prose, came to Pound as a pupil. Pound was the first significant writer to recognize Hemingway’s immense talent, and he did everything possible to help Hemingway achieve success.[4]

      Pound introduced Hemingway to other writers, they played tennis together, they toured Italy in February 1923, and Hemingway even attempted to teach Pound how to box. Hemingway and his wife rented a flat in January 1924 to be near Pound’s home. Hemingway defended Pound in one of his early poems, and borrowed lines from one of Pound’s poems in two of his other poems.[5]

      Hemingway praised Pound’s generosity, his character and his poetry in his book A Moveable Feast:

      Ezra was kinder and more Christian about people than I was…Ezra was the most generous writer I have ever known…He helped poets, painters, sculptors and prose writers that he believed in and he would help anyone whether he believed in them or not if they were in trouble. He worried about everyone and in the time when I first knew him he was most worried about T. S. Eliot who, Ezra told me, had to work in a bank in London and so had insufficient time and bad hours to function as a poet.[6] 

      Hemingway was aware of his immense personal and professional debt to Pound. Pound promoted Hemingway ceaselessly in the 1920s, and by virtue of being one of the “founders” of modernism, Pound assured Hemingway a place in the artistic forefront.[7] Hemingway came to regard Ezra Pound as a lifelong friend.             

Hemingway’s Wartime Activities

      Ernest Hemingway was an unabashedly patriotic and loyal American during World War II. By collaborating on the anthology Men at War, written in Cuba in 1942 and dedicated to his sons, Hemingway was contributing to the expanded war against fascism.[8]

      Hemingway also used his pleasure boat Pilar to become what he would call “a secret agent of my government.” Hemingway and his crew patrolled the northern coast of Cuba in Pilar in search of German submarines, which in 1942 were sinking Allied ships in many parts of the Atlantic. The hope was that the Germans would see a fishing boat going about its business, and would come alongside to buy or seize fresh fish and water. The crew of Pilar would be ready to attack with bazookas, machine guns and hand grenades. While Pilar never encountered any German U-boats at close range, Hemingway took this work seriously and put his heart into the mission.[9]    

      Hemingway was a war correspondent for Collier’s magazine beginning in late May 1944. He was in Europe for the days leading up to the Allied invasion of Normandy, and was allowed to get in one of the LCVPs (landing craft, vehicle and personnel boats) that pushed off a ship toward Omaha Beach. Hemingway was not allowed, however, to wade ashore himself. Regulations required that he stay in the LCVP and watch the fighting through his binoculars.[10]

      Hemingway continued to report on the war in France. He got great satisfaction from his participation in the war and was very popular among the Allied soldiers. Predictably, Hemingway bragged about the extent of his combat experience. He later claimed to have killed many Germans, and while he likely killed some, he probably killed far fewer Germans than he took credit for.[11]

      Allied military authorities were alarmed by allegations that Hemingway had carried a weapon and engaged in combat in France. Hemingway was summoned by the inspector-general of the U.S. Third Army to a judicial investigation on October 6, 1944. Hemingway at this hearing had to downplay his military accomplishments in order to avoid being court-martialed.[12]    

     Hemingway later wrote about crimes he committed during the war. Hemingway wrote in a letter to Charles Scribner dated August 27, 1949:

      One time I killed a very snotty SS kraut who, when I told him I would kill him unless he revealed what his escape route signs were said: You will not kill me, the kraut stated. Because you are afraid to and because you are a race of mongrel degenerates. Besides it is against the Geneva Convention.

      What a mistake you made, brother, I told him and shot him three times in the belly fast and then, when he went down on his knees, shot him on the topside so his brains came out of his mouth or I guess it was his nose.

      The next SS I interrogated talked wonderfully.[13]

      In a letter to Arthur Mizener dated June 2, 1950, Hemingway wrote that he used his M1 to shoot a German youngster riding on a bicycle. Hemingway said the German boy was about the same age as his son Patrick (then age 16).[14] Although Hemingway felt some remorse for this killing[15], he could never bring himself to say anything favorable about the Germans.

      Hemingway wrote in his letters that he killed 122 Germans, including a captured German officer who should have been protected by the Geneva Convention.[16] While Hemingway was probably exaggerating the number of Germans he killed, it is notable that Hemingway openly bragged in writing about his war crimes without fear of reprisals from the Allies.

Pound’s Wartime Activities

      Ezra Pound was an American citizen living in Rome at the time World War II broke out. Unlike Hemingway, Pound was totally disloyal to the United States during the war. Acting upon his own volition, Pound received permission from the Italian government to make unpaid broadcasts from Rome. In February 1940, Pound was heard for the first time on the “American Hour,” a program beamed to the United States by Radio Rome.[17]

      Encouraged by the growing isolationist movement in America, Pound tried to get a visa to return to the United States in the summer of 1941. The United States Embassy accused him of being an agent of Fascism and would not issue him a visa. Confined to Italy, Pound continued his broadcasts and made about 75 radio broadcasts over Radio Rome before the United States entered the war.[18]

      The Italian government became suspicious of Pound’s motives and temporarily stopped him from broadcasting. The odd jargon and mixture of dialects that Pound employed convinced the Italian secret service that he was sending messages in code to the U.S. armed forces. Prevented from making his broadcasts, Pound decided to return to the United States. Pound and his wife Dorothy prepared to leave Rome on a special diplomatic train early in 1942. However, American officials in Rome informed Pound that he was persona non grata with the United States government, and they refused to let him and his wife board the train.[19]

      Pound was eventually allowed to make radio broadcasts again from Italy. He continued to make broadcasts strongly denouncing American involvement in the war, with his last broadcast occurring on May 3, 1945.[20] Eustace Mullins wrote about Pound:

      In the midst of one of the most destructive wars in the history of mankind, Ezra Pound remained true to his calling. While 50 million human beings were dying by violence, he went down to Rome and read his poems over the international wireless. And, as he had been doing all of his life, he interspersed his poetry with blistering invective against politicians and usurers.

      He was the only Bohemian of the Second World War. In a world gone mad, he continued to cry out, “Stop it! Stop it!” He has never raised his hand against another human being.

      Pound was duly indicted for treason, but the chief complaint against him seems to have been that he refused to take part in the slaughter. While so many millions were dipping their hands in blood, he asked only for peace.[21]

On May 14, 1942, Pound broadcast “that there was a force inside the United States that was not only trying to bust up the Monroe Doctrine, not only trying to betray our tradition of keeping out of the European mess, but trying to start a war in order to get America into it.” Pound repeatedly said that international Jewish bankers controlled the democracies and had pushed for World War II.[22]  

Ezra Pound: “I do not want my compatriots from the ages of 20 to 40 to go get slaughtered to keep up the Sassoon and other British Jew rackets in Singapore and in Shanghai. That is not my idea of American patriotism,” he added. In Pound’s view, the American government alliance with British finance capitalism and Soviet Bolshevism was contrary to America’s tradition and heritage.

Ezra Pound Imprisoned

      Pound was sent back to the United States and examined by four psychiatrists at St. Elizabeths Hospital in Washington, D.C. These psychiatrists recommended that Pound not be compelled to stand trial for treason because the pro-Fascist broadcasts he made during the war were the work of a man who had gone insane. Pound, who had warned British and American citizens that Jewish propagandists had deceived them into entering the war against the Axis Powers, was considered to be insane because of his political opinions.[23]

      Pound initially was forced to reside in Howard Hall in St. Elizabeths Hospital. He was surrounded here by rapists and killers who had been adjudged criminally insane. Pound was shut away from daylight among men and women who sometimes screamed day and night, foamed at the mouth, or tried to choke one another. In this environment, it was not expected that Pound would survive very long. Fortunately, after over a year, protests from Pound’s visitors enabled him to be transferred to a less-dangerous part of the hospital.[24]

      Ezra Pound’s wife Dorothy learned from the press that her husband was imprisoned in St. Elizabeths Hospital. Her funds were nearly exhausted when she arrived in Washington. U.S. officials promptly declared her an “enemy alien,” although she had been married to an American citizen for 42 years. As an enemy alien, Dorothy was not allowed to draw upon her savings in England. Hemingway and another poet generously advanced money to Dorothy to help carry her through these difficult days.[25]

      Dorothy Pound began a vigil that was to last for more than 12 years. She was allowed to visit her husband only 15 minutes each afternoon, and a guard was present during these brief meetings. A doctor explained this extra precaution by saying that Pound was under indictment for the most serious offense in American jurisprudence. Bail was denied to Pound, and he was forced to stay in St. Elizabeths against his will.[26]

      Hemingway could not stand the thought of his old friend being locked up. When Hemingway received the Nobel Prize in Literature, he frequently mentioned Pound in the many remarks and interviews he made in the press. Hemingway told a Time reporter that Pound was a great poet and should be freed. In July 1956, Hemingway sent Pound a $1,000 check and paid him a moving tribute, calling Pound “our greatest living poet” and “the man who taught me, gently, to be merciful and tried to teach me to be kind.”[27]

Battling his own demons, Ernest Hemingway remained a loyal friend to Ezra & Dorothy Pound.

      Hemingway and some of Pound’s other friends continued to campaign for Pound’s release, and were instrumental in obtaining his release from St. Elisabeths Hospital in 1958. Although Hemingway never saw or wrote to Pound again, Hemingway continued to speak highly of his old friend.[28] Hemingway also gave Pound a $1,500 check to help him relocate to another country.[29]    

Final Years 

Pound playing a staring-game with his granddaughter, 1958

      Ezra Pound said to reporters on May 7, 1958, as he walked out of St. Elizabeths Hospital, “All America is an insane asylum.”[30] Pound returned to Italy where his poetry was admired. His daughter Mary said that it was always their plan to bring Pound to Italy after his imprisonment in St. Elizabeths so that Pound might have peace and write poetry.[31]

      Pound continued to work on his poem the Cantos, which he had started many years previously. Unfortunately, Pound was not able to finish this epic poem. Some people say Pound hardly spoke in his last years.[32] However, poet Peter Russell spoke to Pound frequently in Pound’s last years and says the myth of his absolute silence is sheer nonsense.[33] Pound died quietly in Venice in 1972 at the age of 87.              

      Ernest Hemingway suffered from declining health in his later years. He had always been accident prone. In addition to two serious concussions in World War II, he suffered from a serious accident on Pilar in 1950, as well as concussions in two consecutive plane crashes during a 24-hour period in January 1954. Hemingway was not exaggerating when he told the Nobel committee that he could not travel to Stockholm to accept their award.[34]

      Hemingway never fully recovered from these injuries. Friends and biographers of Hemingway say that 1954 marked the start of an irreversible downward spiral which was aggravated by various other illnesses and deep depression. Hemingway eventually saw doctors at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, where he underwent electroconvulsive therapy for his depression. This therapy was ineffective, and Hemingway ended his life by shooting himself with a double-barreled shotgun early in the morning on July 2, 1961.[35]  

Conclusion

      Ezra Pound was always sane and never should have been imprisoned in a mental hospital. He was imprisoned solely because he spoke out against the insanity of World War II. Peter Russell writes:

      Apart from being the unique writer he was, he was a good all-rounder and had never had any social or personal difficulties that could not be considered normal. I gather that his comportment in St. Elizabeth’s was such that he received the respect of all who knew him, save where there was a difference of opinion on political and social matters. My own view is that with time, Pound’s basic ideas will be seen to be extremely sane, simple and even obvious. At the end of the war, I don’t think many of us could see things clearly.[36]

      By contrast, Ernest Hemingway was actively involved in World War II, even bragging about murdering a surrendered German soldier in violation of the Geneva Convention. Assuming Hemingway killed this surrendered German soldier, he should have been tried for murder. Fortunately, Hemingway and Pound remained lifelong friends despite their strongly divergent actions during the war.                

Ezra Pound: “The present war dates at least from the founding of the Bank of England at the end of the 17th century, 1694-8. Half a century later, the London usurocracy shut down on the issue of paper money by the Pennsylvania colony, A.D. 1750. This is not usually given prominence in the U.S. school histories. The 13 colonies rebelled, quite successfully, 26 years later, A.D. 1776. According to Pound, it was the money issue (above all) that united the Allies during the second 20th-century war against Germany: “Gold. Nothing else uniting the three governments, England, Russia, United States of America. That is the interest–gold, usury, debt, monopoly, class interest, and possibly gross indifference and contempt for humanity.”
Eustace Mullins “was a student of the poet and political activist Ezra Pound. He states that he frequently visited Pound during his period of incarceration in St. Elizabeth’s Hospital…Mullins claimed that Pound was, in fact, being held as a political prisoner on the behest of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Mullins’ most notable work, Secrets of the Federal Reserve, was commissioned by Pound during this period, and written in consultation with George Stimpson, founder of the National Press Club. Mullins claims that at the time he was writing his first book, he was on the staff of the Library of Congress, but that shortly after it came out in 1952, he was fired. This is repeated by Boller and George…”

Endnotes


[1] Hutchisson, James M., Ernest Hemingway: A New Life, University Park, Pa.: The Pennsylvania State University Press, 2016, p. 1.

[2] Hemingway, Ernest, A Moveable Feast, New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1964, p. 108.

[3] Lynn, Kenneth S., Hemingway, New York: Simon and Schuster, 1987, pp. 162-163.

[4] Meyers, Jeffrey, Hemingway: A Biography, New York: Harper & Row, Publishers, 1985, p. 73.

[5] Ibid., p. 74.

[6] Hemingway, Ernest, A Moveable Feast, New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1964, pp. 108, 110.

[7] Dearborn, Mary V., Ernest Hemingway: A Biography, New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2017, p. 586.

[8] Reynold, Nicholas, Writer, Sailor, Soldier, Spy: Ernest Hemingway’s Secret Adventures, 1935-1961, New York: HarperCollins Publishers, 2017, p. 134.

[9] Ibid., pp. 135-136, 144.

[10] Hutchisson, James M., Ernest Hemingway: A New Life, University Park, Pa.: The Pennsylvania State University Press, 2016, p. 192.

[11] Ibid., pp. 194-195.

[12] Ibid., p. 195.

[13] Baker, Carlos (editor), Ernest Hemingway Selected Letters 1917-1961, New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1981, p. 672.

[14] Ibid., pp. 697-698.

[15] Ibid., p. 697.

[16] Nordbruch, Claus, Bleeding Germany Dry, Pretoria, South Africa: Contact Publishers, 2003, pp. 127-128.

[17] Mullins, Eustace, This Difficult Individual, Ezra Pound, New York: Fleet Publishing Corporation, 1961, pp. 202-203.

[18] Ibid., p. 203.

[19] Ibid.

[20] Ibid., p. 236.

[21] Ibid., p. 201.

[22] Pound, Ezra Loomis, “Ezra Pound Speaking”, Westport, Conn.: Ezra Pound Literary Property Trust, 1978, pp. 130-131.

[23] Lynn, Kenneth S., Hemingway, New York: Simon and Schuster, 1987, p. 163.

[24] Mullins, Eustace, This Difficult Individual, Ezra Pound, New York: Fleet Publishing Corporation, 1961, pp. 18-19.

[25] Ibid., p. 19.

[26] Ibid.

[27] Dearborn, Mary V., Ernest Hemingway: A Biography, New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2017, p. 587.

[28] Ibid.

[29] Reynolds, Michael, Hemingway: The Final Years, New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1999, p. 305.

[30] Ibid.

[31] Swift, Daniel, The Bughouse: The Poetry, Politics, and Madness of Ezra Pound, New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2017, p. 255.

[32] Ibid., pp. 256-258.

[33] Russell, Peter (editor), An Examination of Ezra Pound, New York: Gordian Press, 1973, p. 279.

[34] Reynold, Nicholas, Writer, Sailor, Soldier, Spy: Ernest Hemingway’s Secret Adventures, 1935-1961, New York: HarperCollins Publishers, 2017, pp. 223-224.

[35] Ibid., pp. 225, 252-254, 260.

[36] Russell, Peter (editor), An Examination of Ezra Pound, New York: Gordian Press, 1973, p. 288.

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5 Responses

  1. Richard w weiland says:

    Ezra and Eustace two great human beings. God bless their souls!

  2. papasha408 says:

    Ezra Pound is the father of modern poetry. He edited T.S. Eliot’s ‘The Wasteland,’ as well as other poems. He taught W.B. Yeats how to write modern poetry by weaning him off his Victorian verse. Pound is the most influential poet of the 20th century. Pound was a Bohemian, but, he was also a true man of the Classics, especially the Greeks and Romans. Pound believed in the abolition of Usury which made him a target of the bankers. Pound wasn’t a fascist in the true sense of the term, but, he also realized much like Knut Hamsun did, that it was the Fascists and the National Socialists who were protecting Western Civilization in the twenties, thirties, and forties.

  3. papasha408 says:

    Ernest Hemingway who had a knack for writing very good and exciting prose, also had a vivid imagination and a tendency to be a blowhard. The stories of Hemingway murdering a Waffen SS officer is most assuredly a fabrication. Hemingway’s Machismo was telling tall tales and Rogering as many gullible women who would believe his unbelievable stories. That he made heroes of the Marxist led So-called Republicans in the Spanish Civil War in his stories, tells the story of a very confused individual.

  4. Ira Fader says:

    You are right that “Pound was always sane and never should have been imprisoned in a mental hospital.” But you are grievously and, I’m sorry to say, ignorantly wrong that he “was imprisoned “solely” because he spoke out against the insanity of World War II.” He was deeply enamored of Mussolini and Italian fascism, and during the war he broadcast over 200 speeches denouncing FDR, America, and the Jews. Read his broadcasts. They are available online and they are shocking. The legal case for treason on the merits was overwhelming, and the law he violated was punishable by death. He was sent to St Elizabeths because he chose to plead insanity “solely” for the purpose of avoiding a trial on the evidence of his truly reprehensible wartime activities on behalf of the Axis powers. You may wish to honor his early contributions to art and culture or his (impenetrably complex and elite) Cantos. But do not honor the man, and do not treat him as an anti-war, free speech hero. Here’s a good quote for you, not from his poems but from his broadcast: “I think it might be a good thing to hang Roosevelt and a few hundred thousand yidds.” How poetic.

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